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Multimodal sensory control of motor performance by glycinergic interneurons of the mouse spinal cord deep dorsal horn.

Mark A GradwellNofar Ozeri-EngelhardJaclyn T EisdorferOlivier D LaflammeMelissa GonzalezAman UpadhyayLaura MedlockTara ShrierKomal R PatelAdin AokiMelissa GandhiGloria Abbas-ZadehOlisemaka OputaJoshua K ThackrayMatthew RicciArlene GeorgeNusrath YusufJessica KeatingZarghona ImtiazSimona A AlomaryManon BohicMichael HaasYurdiana HernandezSteven A PrescottTurgay AkayVictoria E Abraira
Published in: Neuron (2024)
Sensory feedback is integral for contextually appropriate motor output, yet the neural circuits responsible remain elusive. Here, we pinpoint the medial deep dorsal horn of the mouse spinal cord as a convergence point for proprioceptive and cutaneous input. Within this region, we identify a population of tonically active glycinergic inhibitory neurons expressing parvalbumin. Using anatomy and electrophysiology, we demonstrate that deep dorsal horn parvalbumin-expressing interneuron (dPV) activity is shaped by convergent proprioceptive, cutaneous, and descending input. Selectively targeting spinal dPVs, we reveal their widespread ipsilateral inhibition onto pre-motor and motor networks and demonstrate their role in gating sensory-evoked muscle activity using electromyography (EMG) recordings. dPV ablation altered limb kinematics and step-cycle timing during treadmill locomotion and reduced the transitions between sub-movements during spontaneous behavior. These findings reveal a circuit basis by which sensory convergence onto dorsal horn inhibitory neurons modulates motor output to facilitate smooth movement and context-appropriate transitions.
Keyphrases
  • spinal cord
  • neuropathic pain
  • spinal cord injury
  • gene expression
  • drug delivery
  • atrial fibrillation
  • high density
  • dna methylation